THALAMIPLOE^l. 15 



TRIBE XI. RAPHANE.E. 

 CRAMBE. KALE. 



C. maritima (sea Kale.) Sandy seashores, not common. 

 Plant smooth and branched, about 2 feet high, with a stout, hard 

 stock. Lower leaves roundish, waved and coarsely toothed, yel- 

 lowish-green, stalked ; upper leaves few and much smaller. 

 Flowers in a dense terminal cluster, large and white. Dawlish. 

 Slapton Sands, from whence it was brought for cultivation in 

 1795, Fl. D. (E. B. t. 924.) P. vi. 



RAPHANUS. EADISH. 



1. R. Raphauistrum (wild R., or jointed Charlock.) In corn- 

 fields, frequent. Stem from 12 to 18 inches high. Lower leaves 

 lyrate and toothed ; upper leaves narrow, toothed, but sometimes 

 entire. Flowers yellow, sometimes reddish, or white, with lilac 

 streaks. Pods 'cylindrical, with a long beak. Torquay, etc., 

 common. (E. B. t. 856.) A. yi. vn. 



2. R. maritimus (sea Radish.) By the seacoast. Rare. 

 Probably merely a seaside variety of the former ; growing some- 

 times as high as 3 or 4 feet. Differs from the last in its irregu- 

 larly lyrate leaves and larger flowers and seed-pods. Various 

 places around the Bay. (E. B. t. 1643.) A. or B. vi.-vm. 



OKD. VII. RESEDACEJE. 

 RESEDA. DYER'S-ROCKET, MIGNONETTE. 



R. Luteola (common D. y Yellow-weed or Weld) In waste 

 grounds and stony pastures. An erect plant, with a hardy stiff 

 stem, not much branched, about 2 feet high, smooth. Leaves 

 long and lance-shaped, slightly waved at the edges. Stems bear- 

 ing long stiff racemes of numerous yellowish-green flowers, with 

 prominent stamens. \Varberry Hill. Fields between Meadfoot 

 and Hope's Nose. Mary church. (E. B. t. 320.) A. YI.-VIII. 



OED. VIII. CISTACE^S. 

 HELXANTHEIYIUM. ROCK-ROSE. 

 1. H. vulgare (common R.) In dry meadows and stony 



